
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Health Care Reform in Italy: Public
vs Private
Even the Ultra
Right Wing Murdoch's Wall Street Journal has high praise for Italy's
Health Care System.
It is a product of focusing on the
Fundamentals. The state has the power to adopt quality standards,
to set its own reimbursement rates, to decide which hospitals qualify for
public funds, and to withhold reimbursement if hospitals don't meet the
proscribed standards. The Private hospitals, rather than paying more
attention to charging what the Market will Bear, and Profits, have
become more efficient, and have been able to compete.
Competitive Care
When Italy's Lombardy region pitted
private hospitals against public ones, the quality of care rose dramatically
Wall Street Journal; By Margherita
Stancati; April 13, 2010
MILAN - When California Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger dropped in on Italy's fashion capital late last year, his
focus wasn't just the city's designer shops. He was also intensely interested
in the state-of-the-art local health system.
Journal Report
Read the full Health Care report
.
With the U.S. searching for ideas
about how to make health care more affordable, he said during a speech,
"I hope we have a situation where the federal government?looks at the entire
world, including this region here."
As the U.S. debates the proper roles
for the public and private sectors in health care, Italy's Lombardy region
suggests a way that encouraging competition between the two can improve
health care overall. For the past 10 years, public and private hospitals
in Lombardy have competed directly for patients, and in doing so have created
what is considered by many to be one of Europe's most efficient health-care
systems.
Walk-In Service
Like other European countries, Italy
offers universal health-care coverage backed by the state. Italians can
go to a public hospital, for example, without involving an insurance company.
The patients are charged a small co-pay, but most of the bill is paid by
the government. As a result, the great majority of Italians don't bother
to buy private health insurance unless they want to seek treatment from
private doctors or hospitals, which are relatively few.
Offering guaranteed reimbursements
to public hospitals, though, took away the hospitals' incentive to improve
service or rein in costs. Inefficiencies were rampant as a result, and
the quality of Italy's public health care suffered for years. Months-long
waiting lists became the norm for nonemergency procedures "even heart surgery"
in most of the country.
Big changes came in 1997, when Italy's
national government decentralized the country's health-care system, giving
the regions control over the public money that goes to hospitals within
their own borders. The money still comes from the central government, which
also determines what methods and drugs must be included in various treatments
in order to meet national health-care standards. But each region now has
the power to adopt additional quality standards, to set its own reimbursement
rates, to decide which hospitals qualify for public funds, and to withhold
reimbursement if hospitals don't meet the proscribed standards.
In much of the country, regions have
continued to use the standards of care and reimbursement rates recommended
by Rome. Some also give preferential treatment to public hospitals, making
it more difficult for private hospitals to qualify for public funds.
Lombardy, by contrast, has increased
its quality standards, set its own reimbursement rates and, most important,
put public and private hospitals on an equal footing by making each equally
eligible for public funds. If a hospital meets the quality standards and
charges the accepted reimbursement rate, it qualifies. Patients are free
to choose between state-run and publicly funded private hospitals at no
extra cost. Their co-pay is the same in either case. As a result, public
and many private hospitals in Lombardy compete directly for patients and
funds.
Commercial Spirit
One reason Lombardy took this path:
Italy's prosperous North traditionally has had a more commercial spirit
than the rest of the country. Indeed, many of the regional governments,
by contrast, have an ideological prejudice against private health care.
"When it comes to health care, there are still people who think public
is beautiful and private is evil," says Walter Ricciardi, a professor of
health-care management at Rome's Sacro Cuore University.
Around 30% of hospital care in Lombardy
is private now?more than anywhere else in Italy. And service in both the
private and public sector has improved. Patients in Lombardy receive among
the widest array of treatments in Italy, and are covered for a longer list
of prescription drugs than almost anywhere else in Europe. Waiting times
were slashed, too.
"Up to 10 years ago my patients had
to wait months for heart surgery," says Ottavio Alfieri, a surgeon at Milan's
private San Raffaele hospital and formerly in a public hospital. "Now,
in Lombardy, it can be done almost immediately, in both state-run and private
hospitals."
Marco Cozzoli, a top health-care
officer in the regional government, says the public hospitals had to improve
because they were no longer the only players on the field. Rooms and food
were upgraded, for starters. At Milan's state-run Niguarda Hospital, for
example, patients are no longer crammed into six-bed hospital wards, but
stay in double rooms. As Pasquale Cannatelli, the head of the hospital,
says, "People have certain expectations of services in private hospitals.
State-run hospitals should be no different."
Private Upgrades
But private hospitals, too, upgraded
services in order to qualify for reimbursements. Some built maternity wards,
for example, with staffs of midwives and pediatricians, and delivery rooms
with carefully monitored temperature and humidity levels. Other hospitals
added emergency rooms "which are particularly costly" to earn additional
payments.
Still, Lombardy has kept its health-care
costs down, even with the additional services and upgrades. While most
Italian regions tend to overspend their health-care budgets, Lombardy over
the past six years has underspent its annual budgets by a total of more
than ?200 million ($270 million)?money that the regional government has
partly used to improve its health-care infrastructure further.
Lombardy's public hospitals were
under the most pressure to cut costs. In fact, this is the only region
in Italy in which managers of public hospitals can be fired if they go
over budget. Dr. Cannatelli says Niguarda Hospital no longer requires patients
to stay overnight for routine surgery, such as cataract removal. This helps
reduce costs.
Will Travel
Another reason Lombardy's per capita
health-care costs are lower: Italy's other regions help pay the bills.
The high quality of Lombardy's hospitals is known throughout the country,
and Italians can seek medical care in any region they choose. While patients
must pay their own travel costs, the home region pays their medical bills.
This regional migration is greater in Lombardy than in any other Italian
region, officials say: Around 10% of Lombardy's hospital patients come
from elsewhere in the nation.
Some experts say giving patients
this freedom "and placing health care in the hands of regional governments
in general" creates disparities between hospitals in the rich North and
poorer ones in the South.
"It means fewer treatments" in the
South, says Dr. Ricciardi, the professor in Rome. "When patients get sick,
you can't respond properly. The rich and better organized regions benefit
from the system, while the poor and less organized ones are harmed by it."
Without question, hospitals in Lombardy
have benefited?both public and private. In 2009, Niguarda brought in Euro
26 million ($36 million) for treatment of patients from the rest of Italy,
money it then reinvested in its facilities. The privately run San Raffaele
earned Euro70 million.
It is patients, however, who have
the most to gain. Today, it's difficult for people in Lombardy to even
tell the difference between public and private hospitals. "Patients don't
care whether hospitals are public or private?not at all," says Renato Botti,
head of San Raffaele hospital. "All they want is good health care."
Ms. Stancati is a Wall Street
Journal staff reporter in Rome. She
can be reached at margherita.stancati@wsj.com
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